The second segment follows Frances McDormand as she investigates a Parisian student union revolting against the ignorant powers that be. The first and best segment follows Tilda Swinton discussing a heralded but imprisoned experimental artist (Benicio del Toro) who is dealing with the pressure to produce. ![]() This is not the most accessible Anderson movie for a newbie it's very bourgeois in the kinds of people it follows, the stories it pursues, and the intellectual and political conflicts it demonstrates. It's occasionally so arch and droll that it feels too removed from actual comedy. Perhaps that is Anderson's wry, subtle point considering the entire journalistic voice of the movie feels like somebody made a movie in the style of one of those esoteric, supposedly "funny" New Yorker cartoons. I was amused throughout but each felt like a short film that had been pushed beyond its breaking point. This narrative decision limits the emotional involvement and I found myself growing restless with each of the three segments. ![]() The French Dispatch is structured like you're watching the issue of a news magazine come to visual life, meaning that the two-hour movie is comprised of mainly three lengthy vignettes and a couple of short asides. Wes Anderson's latest quirk-fest is his usual cavalcade of straight-laced absurdity, exquisite dollhouse-level production design, famous faces popping in for droll deadpans, and the overall air of not fully getting it.
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